Mauprat (1837) by George Sand is the complex love story of the initially wild and uneducated Bern...
At the Foot of the Rainbow (1907) by Gene Stratton Porter is the story of the complex bonds of fr...
The Professor (1857) was Charlotte Brontë's first and least regarded novel, rejected by all publi...
HER FATHER'S DAUGHTER (1921) by Gene Stratton Porter is the story of Linda Strong, the titular he...
WIVES AND DAUGHTERS by Elizabeth Gaskell, originally serialized in Cornhill Magazine from 1864 to...
'Mike Allen will infect your subconscious with hallucinatory and alarming delight. This book is a...
The Moorland Cottage (1850) by Elizabeth Gaskell follows the life story of a very different siste...
The Gadfly (1897) by Ethel Lillian Voynich is a startling multi-layered story of ideological tran...
Candide, or Optimism (1759) written by Voltaire, the shining star of the French Enlightenment, is...
The George Sand-Gustave Flaubert Letters is a compilation of personal correspondence between two ...
The Harvester (1911) by Gene Stratton Porter is the story of a Thoreau-esque idealist and natural...
CRANFORD (1851-1853) by Elizabeth Gaskell is the quintessential novel of British Victorian small ...
Siddhartha (1922) by Hermann Hesse is a deceptively simple, intense, and lyrical allegorical tale...
Laddie, A True Blue Story (1913) by Gene Stratton Porter is a wonderful and semi-autobiographical...
At the Foot of the Rainbow (1907) by Gene Stratton Porter is the story of the complex bonds of fr...
As long as life remains, there's hope;Thou rustic God, oh hear our prayerGreat Priapus, I thee in...
MARY BARTON (1848) by the socially conscious Victorian author Elizabeth Gaskell is the heartfelt ...
After the Sundial by Vera Nazarian is the author's first short fiction collection that focuses sp...
You have two options. You die, or you Qualify.The year is 2047. An extinction-level asteroid is h...
Many are called... She alone can save the world and become Death's bride.COBWEB BRIDE (Cobweb Bri...
A Daughter of the Land (1918) by Gene Stratton Porter is, above all, a love song of a woman and t...
Captain Blood: His Odyssey (1922) by Rafael Sabatini is just possibly the novel that gave rise to...
Pan (1894) by Knut Hamsun who won the 1920 Nobel Prize in Literature, is a multi-layered psycholo...
Changing Fate [Large Print Edition]
The Fortunes and Misfortunes of the Famous Moll Flanders &c. (1722) by Daniel Defoe is a picaresq...
The classic fairy tales compiled by Jacob and Wilhelm, the Brothers Grimm (1812) are stories of d...
COMEDIES OF COURTSHIP (1896) by Anthony Hope, author of the popular adventure classic The Prisone...
A Philadaphia Inquirer Editor's Choice selection.
Graustark is an imaginary country which cannot be found on any map, but which exists in your imag...
Michael O'Halloran (1915) by Gene Stratton Porter is the story of a streetwise but sterling-hones...
The Harvester (1911) by Gene Stratton Porter is the story of a Thoreau-esque idealist and natural...
Vanity Fair: A Novel Without a Hero is an unparalleled satire of 19th Century British Society, wr...
NORTH AND SOUTH (1854) by Elizabeth Gaskell is both a social commentary and the romantic story of...
The Sorrows of Young Werther (1774; revised 1787) by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe is a short, mostl...
Hunger by Knut Hamsun is a strange, semi-delirious, gorgeous narrative of a young man who wanders...
CLEOPATRA (1894) by the acclaimed German Egyptologist Georg Ebers is a grand and romantic histori...
'Whimsy and malice--yes--also mystery, a very female sensuality, and wit. An elegant and entert...
In order to get away from the married doctor she had fallen in love with, Susan Moore took a job ...
THE EXPLORER (1907) by W. Somerset Maugham is a story of the proud Allertons whose fortune has be...
Villette (1853) by Charlotte Brontë is the story of Englishwoman Lucy Snowe who ends up a teacher...
Allen's newest collection gathers 57 poems that explore regions sometimes whimsical, sometimes te...